You are the one claiming nothing even remotely like the things that people have studied and talked about for EONS exists when most people are mostly right most of the time.
The OP claim is perfectly accurate, if by 'like gods' we mean 'that has been worshipped as a god by any religion in human history'.
Religions invariably have gods that either created everything, or intervene in human lives (or deaths), or both; and both of these types of god are demonstrably impossible.
Inventing a third category and calling it 'god' is just pointless sophistry, unless you can recruit at least a small cult of devout believers who worship your new entity, and believe it to be both non-fictional, and worthy of the name 'god'.
People are mostly right most of the time. But they are also frequently wrong, and often cling to falsehoods for long periods of time. So that's a truly weak argument for anything.
Actually "inventing" another category" is not pointless. It may be pointless to you, but some have connections to the life around them that you may not have. Like Dogs. I have no idea why people treat them like they are anything more than an animal. I understand its me and not them tho. They love dogs, that's cool with me.
I like to see what claims match what we see around us the best. Do they offer an explanation, mechanism, and make repeatable predictions.
If a new set of traits for god match them, so be it. Its not going to be a deity. But its not going to be "nothing more" either. The belief in something more just matches what we experience better than nothing more.
Dogs are much better people than most humans. But they’re not another category, humans, like dogs, are animals.
I get you and it does seem that way sometimes. To me, dogs are not "better people" than most people. I watch how a pack of dogs treat each other and ask myself would I want humans to use those laws.
I guess the key wording about your statement about god is "... has been worshipped ..." If we change that to "god category" is like the category "animal"? We just have to see what one(s) match the system we see and experience.
A pantheist type looks like its just describing the universe as "alive" and that matches what we see and experience to a degree. Pantheist also looks like it matches atheism to me also. But I don't know much about it to tell ya truth. It certainty matches better than an overseer deity type to me. And claiming that there is nothing more or "no god or gods of any type" also doesn't match as well.
Packs of dogs lack language to effect a continuous wave of educational cycling.
The thing(a) that for humans allows the whole cycle to feed back at a positive rate, thus that technology builds up, is missing from canines naturally: they cannot tell oral histories. Instead their communications are stories of
smells that they expose each other to and remember.
Instead of looking at a pack of dogs, maybe think about @whataboutbunny on TikTok and ask yourself whether SHE is a person or close to it.
Wild humans have some pretty egregious behaviors too, when lacking laws and behavioral structures otherwise developed over many thousands of years.
Even humans brought up in tribal structures can, if deprived from the necessities of re-attaining that particular tribal structure in an environment, descend to much worse behavior than a pack of wild dogs in said environment.